Short-term air pollution exposure and exacerbation events in mild to moderate COPD: a case-crossover study within the CanCOLD cohort

Author:

Ross Bryan AORCID,Doiron Dany,Benedetti Andrea,Aaron Shawn D,Chapman Kenneth,Hernandez Paul,Maltais François,Marciniuk Darcy,O'Donnell Denis E,Sin Don D,Walker Brandie L,Tan WanORCID,Bourbeau JeanORCID

Abstract

BackgroundInfections are considered as leading causes of acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Non-infectious risk factors such as short-term air pollution exposure may play a clinically important role. We sought to estimate the relationship between short-term air pollutant exposure and exacerbations in Canadian adults living with mild to moderate COPD.MethodsIn this case-crossover study, exacerbations (‘symptom based’: ≥48 hours of dyspnoea/sputum volume/purulence; ‘event based’: ‘symptom based’ plus requiring antibiotics/corticosteroids or healthcare use) were collected prospectively from 449 participants with spirometry-confirmed COPD within the Canadian Cohort Obstructive Lung Disease. Daily nitrogen dioxide (NO2), fine particulate matter (PM2.5), ground-level ozone (O3), composite of NO2and O3(Ox), mean temperature and relative humidity estimates were obtained from national databases. Time-stratified sampling of hazard and control periods on day ‘0’ (day-of-event) and Lags (‘−1’ to ‘−6’) were compared by fitting generalised estimating equation models. All data were dichotomised into ‘warm’ (May–October) and ‘cool’ (November–April) seasons. ORs and 95% CIs were estimated per IQR increase in pollutant concentrations.ResultsIncreased warm season ambient concentration of NO2was associated with symptom-based exacerbations on Lag−3 (1.14 (1.01 to 1.29), per IQR), and increased cool season ambient PM2.5was associated with symptom-based exacerbations on Lag−1 (1.11 (1.03 to 1.20), per IQR). There was a negative association between warm season ambient O3and symptom-based events on Lag−3 (0.73 (0.52 to 1.00), per IQR).ConclusionsShort-term ambient NO2and PM2.5exposure were associated with increased odds of exacerbations in Canadians with mild to moderate COPD, further heightening the awareness of non-infectious triggers of COPD exacerbations.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Réseau en Santé Respiratoire du FRQS

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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